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> "Birth of the Laser Printer" > > Gary Starkweather > Apple Computer > > 5:30 PM, Tuesday, March 25 > Training and Conference Center > Moffett Field > Mt. View > (directions at end) > > Note: please reply by email, to nurkse@eng.sun.com, if you plan to > attend, and mention in your reply if you are not a US citizen > > >When the first laser printer was developed over 20 years ago at Xerox >Palo Alto Research Center (PARC), the goal was very ambitious: a page >of output every second, at 600 dpi resolution. As usual, technical >problems in development forced a compromise. But not much of a >compromise, seeing the final result: two pages every second, at 300 dpi >resolution. > >Anyone waiting at a printer for hardcopy today may wonder how the very >first laser printer in the world achieved two pages a second. And >although common today, laser printers were developed almost ten years >before the PC and the Mac, in a previous generation of computer >technology. In fact, the first laser printer proposal dates back to >1967, thirty years ago. > >In this talk Gary Starkweather will describe how he led the initial >development of the laser printer at PARC. But it was a group effort: >people were needed with skills in optics, analog and digital >electronics, chemistry and mechanical sciences to make a functioning >system. Others contributed to make the system demonstrable and >functional. The talk will conclude with a brief look at where the >technology is today. > >During the talk, Gary will have the first prototype at his side. After >the talk, everyone is welcome to walk over to The Computer Museum >Visible Storage area at Moffett Field, for wine and cheese, and to view >the fifty tons of computer hardware on display (with fifty more tons on >its way from Boston)---the largest collection of historical computer >equipment anywhere in the world. Including the first laser printer >model in use at PARC. > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ > >Directions: from highway 101 in Mt. View, take the Moffett Field exit >(ignore any signs or exits for Moffett Blvd.). You will come >immediately up to the Moffett Field main gate. Park to the right side >of the gate, in the visitor's parking area, and go into the Visitor >Office building to get a badge and further directions. Please remember >to send a email message before the talk to nurkse@eng.sun.com to >confirm, and state in the message if you are not a US citizen. > >Zoe Allison >The Computer Museum History Center |